Blood Products. Preparation of Blood Components
Blood Products. Preparation of Blood Components
Blood Products. Preparation of Blood Components
Whole blood
plasma
90% water 10% plasma material Fresh frozen plasma Backed Red Cells RBC
Platelet concentrate
Cryoprecipitate VIII = AHF albumin Fibrinogen Immunoglobulin Others
Blood bags
Single blood bag:
Whole blood
Double bags:
Backed red cells plasma
Triple bags:
Backed cells Plasma platelets
Quarterly bags:
Backed cells Plasma Platelets Plasma factors
Special bags: Frozen blood upto 2 years and store under ( 70- 90 c) The bags should be sterile = no contamination. Patient information's: No of patients. Name. Others.
Centrifugation
This is the first step of blood preparation Depend on 2 factors: Relative centrifugation factor (RCF). Duration of centrifugation. 1. Heavy spin 5000 /g / 7min = leukocyte-poor RBC, or cell free plasma. 5000/g / 5min = backed cell and platelet concentrate. 4170/ g / 10min = cryoprecipitate 2. Light spin 4170 /g/2min = platelet rich plasma. Centrifugation temp. Platelet = at 22c Others = 1-6c
1- Whole Blood:
Contents
RBCs WBCs Platelets Plasma Clotting factors
Indications
Acute loss of whole blood
Indications
Replace O2 carrying capacity with less volume Severe anemia, slow blood loss, CHF
6- Platelet concentrate
Contents Platelets WBCs Plasma Indications Low platelet counts (bleeding) . Platelet concentrates are used to prevent bleeding in: asymptomatic severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count < 10,000/L) For bleeding patients with less severe thrombocytopenia (platelet count < 50,000/L) For bleeding patients with platelet dysfunction due to antiplatelet drugs but with normal platelet count For patients receiving massive transfusion that causes dilutional thrombocytopenia And sometimes before invasive surgery.
6- Platelet concentrate
Preparation:
Platelet-rich plasma is separated by light spin from erythrocyte. Platelet conc. is then obtained by a heavy spin of platelet rich plasma. Centrifugation should be done at 22c. Separation should be done within 4h. After the blood is drawn. Plasma portion can be frozen as FFP.
6- Platelet concentrate
Plasma should be frozen within 2h of separation at 30c or less. When needed, Frozen plasma should then be thawed between 1-6c over night in a refrigerator or more quickly in a water path at 4c. One platelet concentrate increases the platelet count by about 10,000/L, and adequate hemostasis is achieved with a platelet count of about 10,000/L in a patient without complicating conditions and about 50,000/L for those undergoing surgery. Therefore, 4 to 6 random donor platelet concentrates are commonly used in adults.
6- Platelet concentrate
Platelet concentrates are increasingly being prepared by automated devices that harvest the platelets (or other cells) and return unneeded components (eg, RBCs, plasma) to the donor. This procedure, called cytapheresis, provides enough platelets from a single donation (equivalent to 6 random platelet units) for transfusion to an adult, which, because it minimizes infectious and immunogenic risks, is preferred to multiple donor transfusions in certain conditions.
6- Platelet concentrate
Certain patients may not respond to platelet transfusions, possibly because of splenic sequestration or platelet consumption due to HLA or platelet-specific antigen alloimmunization. These patients may respond to multiple random donor platelets (because of greater likelihood that some units are HLA compatible), platelets from family members, or ABO- or HLA-matched platelets. Alloimmunization may be mitigated by transfusing WBC-depleted RBCs and WBC-depleted platelet concentrates.
Indications
Hemophilia A Fibrinogen deficiency Factor XIII deficiency
8- WBCs:
Granulocytes: Contents WBCs 20% Plasma Indications Life-threatening decreases in WBC count Granulocytes may be transfused when sepsis occurs in a patient with profound persistent neutropenia (WBCs < 500/L) who is unresponsive to antibiotics.
8- WBCs:
Important Notes: Granulocytes must be given within 24 h of harvest; however, testing for HIV, hepatitis, human T-cell lymphotropic virus, and syphilis may not be completed before infusion. Because of improved antibiotic therapy and drugs that stimulate granulocyte production during chemotherapy, granulocytes are seldom used.
9- Immune globulins:
Rh immune globulin (RhIg), given IM or IV, prevents development of maternal Rh antibodies that can result from fetomaternal hemorrhage. Other immune globulins are available for postexposure prophylaxis for patients exposed to a number of infectious diseases, including cytomegalovirus, hepatitis A and B, measles, rabies, respiratory syncytial virus, rubella, tetanus, smallpox, and varicella.
Indications
Expand volume in burns Hemorrhage Hypoproteinemia
11- Albumin:
Contents
5% or 25% albumin
Indications
Replace volume in shock Burns Hypoproteinemia